Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I haven't seen one of these cases happen in a while. I think they did a big data match, caught a bunch of school and city employees, and that must have had some sort of deterrent effect. And cases that reach a settlement don't tend to make the news.
https://oag.dc.gov/release/ag-racine-sues-seven-adults-residency-fraud-dc
https://oag.dc.gov/release/ag-racine-sues-six-maryland-parents-residency
https://oag.dc.gov/release/ag-racine-sues-four-maryland-parents-and-dcps
I don't think Schwalb is nearly as interested as Racine was in catching residency cheaters. For one, I don't think he's particularly competent. And for two, I don't think he would like what he finds if he were to investigate.
Residency fraud is an issue, but not at the schools that get posted about here. Too many struggling charters would go under if they didn't look the other way.
Anonymous wrote:I think residency fraud is probably not widespread at popular DCPS schools.
People with out of state tags living in DC, however…
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I haven't seen one of these cases happen in a while. I think they did a big data match, caught a bunch of school and city employees, and that must have had some sort of deterrent effect. And cases that reach a settlement don't tend to make the news.
https://oag.dc.gov/release/ag-racine-sues-seven-adults-residency-fraud-dc
https://oag.dc.gov/release/ag-racine-sues-six-maryland-parents-residency
https://oag.dc.gov/release/ag-racine-sues-four-maryland-parents-and-dcps
I don't think Schwalb is nearly as interested as Racine was in catching residency cheaters. For one, I don't think he's particularly competent. And for two, I don't think he would like what he finds if he were to investigate.
Anonymous wrote:I haven't seen one of these cases happen in a while. I think they did a big data match, caught a bunch of school and city employees, and that must have had some sort of deterrent effect. And cases that reach a settlement don't tend to make the news.
https://oag.dc.gov/release/ag-racine-sues-seven-adults-residency-fraud-dc
https://oag.dc.gov/release/ag-racine-sues-six-maryland-parents-residency
https://oag.dc.gov/release/ag-racine-sues-four-maryland-parents-and-dcps
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:A lot of working class families have incredibly complicated and ever changing housing arrangements. Mom lives one place, dad lives somewhere else, mom’s ex who is the dad of some of the kids lives somewhere else and his mom serves as a 4th grandma to all of the kids, a best friend from childhood is also a cousin who the kids stay with in the summer, etc etc. I’m not passing judgment; these can be incredibly warm and happy families. But the idea of “kid grows up in one house with one mom and one dad and that’s it” is just not the reality. So it isn’t residency fraud, families just are trying to figure out the best educational and logistical options given all the places to stay and fluctuating family dynamics.
The problem with that line of thought is that most of the publicized cases of DCPS residency fraud -- the ones the DC attorney general has prosecuted -- do not involve the situations you describe but rather non-resident city employees with ostensibly stable households who cheat the system simply because it aligns with their commutes. Or high-ranking city officials who use their pull to get their kids into desired DCPS schools and think they can get away with it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:A lot of working class families have incredibly complicated and ever changing housing arrangements. Mom lives one place, dad lives somewhere else, mom’s ex who is the dad of some of the kids lives somewhere else and his mom serves as a 4th grandma to all of the kids, a best friend from childhood is also a cousin who the kids stay with in the summer, etc etc. I’m not passing judgment; these can be incredibly warm and happy families. But the idea of “kid grows up in one house with one mom and one dad and that’s it” is just not the reality. So it isn’t residency fraud, families just are trying to figure out the best educational and logistical options given all the places to stay and fluctuating family dynamics.
The problem with that line of thought is that most of the publicized cases of DCPS residency fraud -- the ones the DC attorney general has prosecuted -- do not involve the situations you describe but rather non-resident city employees with ostensibly stable households who cheat the system simply because it aligns with their commutes. Or high-ranking city officials who use their pull to get their kids into desired DCPS schools and think they can get away with it.
Anonymous wrote:A lot of working class families have incredibly complicated and ever changing housing arrangements. Mom lives one place, dad lives somewhere else, mom’s ex who is the dad of some of the kids lives somewhere else and his mom serves as a 4th grandma to all of the kids, a best friend from childhood is also a cousin who the kids stay with in the summer, etc etc. I’m not passing judgment; these can be incredibly warm and happy families. But the idea of “kid grows up in one house with one mom and one dad and that’s it” is just not the reality. So it isn’t residency fraud, families just are trying to figure out the best educational and logistical options given all the places to stay and fluctuating family dynamics.
Anonymous wrote:Probably more in FCPS than anywhere else. Hello football scandal.